enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of sports team names and mascots derived from indigenous ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sports_team_names...

    The practice of deriving sports team names, imagery, and mascots from Indigenous peoples of North America is a significant phenomenon in the United States and Canada. The popularity of stereotypical representations of American Indians in global culture has led to a number of teams in Europe also adopting team names derived from Native Americans.

  3. Dog Soldiers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog_Soldiers

    A modern Dog Soldier headdress at a pow wow. The Dog Soldiers or Dog Men (Cheyenne: Hotamétaneo'o) are historically one of six Cheyenne military societies.Beginning in the late 1830s, this society evolved into a separate, militaristic band that played a dominant role in Cheyenne resistance to the westward expansion of the United States in the area of present-day Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado ...

  4. Cheyenne military societies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheyenne_military_societies

    Cheyenne military societies. Cheyenne military societies are one of the two central institutions of traditional Cheyenne native American tribal governance, the other being the Council of Forty-four. While council chiefs are responsible for overall governance of individual bands and the tribe as a whole, the headmen of military societies are in ...

  5. Koitsenko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koitsenko

    The Koitsenko ( Kiowa: Qkoie-Tsain-Gah, lit. ''Principal Dogs" or "Real Dogs'') was a group of the ten greatest warriors of the Kiowa tribe as a whole, from all bands. One was Satank who died while being taken to trial for the Warren Wagon Train Raid. The Koitsenko were elected out of the various military societies of the Kiowa, the "Dog Soldiers."

  6. NCAA Native American mascot decision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NCAA_Native_American...

    Controversies. San Diego State University (SDSU) was not cited by the NCAA in 2005 due to a decision that the Aztecs were not a Native American tribe with any living descendants. [7] A SDSU professor of American Indian Studies states that among other problems the mascot teaches the mistaken idea that the Aztecs were a local tribe rather than ...

  7. List of secondary school sports team names and mascots ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_secondary_school...

    In a list of the top 100 team names, "Indians" is 14th, "Braves" is 38th, "Chiefs" is 57th. [1] The typical logo is an image of a stereotypical Native American man in profile, wearing a Plains Indians headdress; and are often cartoons or caricatures. Other imagery include dreamcatchers, feathers, spears, and arrows.

  8. List of college sports team names and mascots derived from ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_college_sports...

    Cochise College, Douglas, Arizona (Apaches) – Community College. Haskell Indian Nations University, Lawrence, Kansas (Fighting Indians) – Tribal university. Lewis–Clark State College, Lewiston, Idaho (Warriors) – Logo features Lewis and Clark, use of Warriors nickname deemed respectful by Tribal leaders.

  9. Native American mascot laws and regulations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_mascot...

    The use of terms and images referring to Native Americans / First Nations as the name or mascot for a sports team is a topic of public controversy in the United States and in Canada, arising as part of the Native American/First Nations civil rights movements. The retirement of the Washington Redskins and the Cleveland Indians has tipped public ...